Feb-16-2015 05:00 PM
Feb-19-2015 07:47 AM
Turbo Turtle wrote:MFL wrote:
If your 96, is a full 4-door crew cab 4x4,gas, it will have the 7.5 (460) engine. It will be a strong puller, if in good condition. It was rated to pull 10,000 lbs.
To find out what pin weight it will carry, you will have to weigh the rear axle, with the truck loaded with everything you plan to take camping. There should be a RAWR sticker in the drivers door. It should show 6,000 plus lbs.
With the rear tires only, sitting on the scale, lets say the weight on rear axle, shows 3,500 lbs. You now just subtract that 3,500 from the RAWR of 6,000, if that is the number on the door sticker.
This will give you the available pin weight. In this case it would be 2500 lbs. It may be more, if your RAWR is more, as listed on door sticker.
This would mean that you could handle a 10,000 lb., loaded weight FW, as that is the limit your powertrain is rated to pull. A 10,000 lb. loaded weight FW, would have about 2,000 lbs. of pin weight.
Jerry
The number on our door sticker RAWR is 6084.
AND: Doesn't that pin # change with, say, how much you pack into the trailer in front of its wheels and how much in the rear? Or is the balanced weight the same: just an overall load?
Feb-19-2015 06:56 AM
Feb-18-2015 01:23 PM
Turbo Turtle wrote:
Thanks for your patience and replies, everyone!
Sorry to be so dense.
We'll get the trailer this coming weekend, and plan to weigh it empty before we pick up the trailer and then afterward, with the trailer on, but low on gas in the truck. We can figure gas weight; then we plan to weigh everything that goes onto the trailer as we come up to speed, and the truck (though, we are light travelers on weekends and won't need much in the truck). Our first trip will be in mid-March, a weekend, and we'll pack very light. Still, we'll weigh again as we pass the CAT scales just to see.
FWIW: My truck is in excellent condition. Was babied all of its life, though it sure does guzzle gas! We have pulled smaller horse trailers with no issues, and we live in the mountains of WV. However, last spring, my EMPTY horse trailer snapped its axle (it was an ancient, bumper pull kind) in the parking lot overnight (after being towed all day) so I'm sensitive to what can happen. Don't want to see that on a 10K# trailer and on the Interstate!
Feb-18-2015 11:07 AM
Feb-18-2015 10:01 AM
Feb-18-2015 09:09 AM
Feb-18-2015 08:41 AM
Feb-18-2015 07:48 AM
MFL wrote:
If your 96, is a full 4-door crew cab 4x4,gas, it will have the 7.5 (460) engine. It will be a strong puller, if in good condition. It was rated to pull 10,000 lbs.
To find out what pin weight it will carry, you will have to weigh the rear axle, with the truck loaded with everything you plan to take camping. There should be a RAWR sticker in the drivers door. It should show 6,000 plus lbs.
With the rear tires only, sitting on the scale, lets say the weight on rear axle, shows 3,500 lbs. You now just subtract that 3,500 from the RAWR of 6,000, if that is the number on the door sticker.
This will give you the available pin weight. In this case it would be 2500 lbs. It may be more, if your RAWR is more, as listed on door sticker.
This would mean that you could handle a 10,000 lb., loaded weight FW, as that is the limit your powertrain is rated to pull. A 10,000 lb. loaded weight FW, would have about 2,000 lbs. of pin weight.
Jerry
Feb-18-2015 07:38 AM
Feb-18-2015 06:26 AM
Turbo Turtle wrote:
...
Sorry to be so dense.
...
Feb-18-2015 04:48 AM
Feb-18-2015 04:30 AM
Feb-18-2015 04:19 AM
Feb-18-2015 03:34 AM